Aims:
To identify variables having a critical role in prostate cancer patients experiencing osteo-metastasis.
Background:
Prostatic carcinoma is a multifactorial complex disorder that exhibits increased propensity to develop bone metastasis. An
interplay of inflammatory and bone remodelling parameters promotes formation of pre-metastatic niches in bones of patients, which
could render them more vulnerable to skeletal disabilities.
Objective:
To evaluate the multi-dynamic inter-relationship of circulating variables in prostate cancer patients experiencing osteometastasis.
Materials and Methods:
Fifty-seven (n=57) men with clinically confirmed prostate cancer, fifty-nine (n=59) with skeletal metastases and
one hundred (n=100) healthy subjects i.e., men aging from 53-84 years with no clinical evidence of prostate were recruited from the
Jinnah Hospital Lahore, Pakistan. Informed consent was obtained, and a venous blood sample was drawn and stored at -70 oC until
assayed. Levels of variables were evaluated using appropriate methods. Levels of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), osteopontin (OPN),
TGH-β, and sRANKL were estimated by the ELISA method. Each sample was suspended and the given protocol was employed. ELISA
readings were obtained for the estimation of all variables.
Results: Highly significant (P ˂ 0.05) differential expression of oxidative stress, inflammatory cytokines and bone remodelling variables
was observed in localized and osteo-metastatic CA prostate patients. A strong positive correlation was revealed among OPN, sRANKL,
MMP-7, MMP-9, PSA and TGF-β (OPN vs MMP-7, r=0.698* and OPN vs MMP-9, r=0.765**, OPN vs RANKL, =0.856*, sRANKL vs
MMP-9, r=0.825**, TGF-β vs RANKL, r=0.868* and PSA vs TGF- β, r=0.752*); lower levels of OPG were estimated in metastasized
patients, showing that both osteolytic and osteoblastic phases of bone remodelling occur simultaneously.
Conclusion:
The altered oxidative and inflammatory responses endorse matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) increased activity,
RANKL/OPG imbalance and enhanced bone matrix proteins turnover, which can foster the process of osteo-metastasis. The perturbed
RANKL/OPG drift and enhanced PSA levels are associated with increased TGF-β activity to aggravate epithelial mesenchymal transition
(EM) and osteo-tropism of prostate cancer. Thus, designing novel targets of these major variables can minimize the incidence of prostate
cancer patients.